The Cookie polls

I reprehensively neglected to mention the all-important cookie polls in my recent Darkstream on alternative election indicators:

The real winner of the 2020 election might be this Pennsylvania bakery.

A family-owned bakery in the town of Hatboro claims that its election-themed cookies — which are currently flying off the rack — have accurately predicted the outcome of the past three presidential elections.

So far, they say sales indicate a clear leader for the 2020 race, too.

Lochel’s Bakery, located in Montgomery County just north of Philadelphia, had launched its most recent “cookie poll” about six weeks back, offering both “Trump 2020” cookies and “Biden 2020” cookies in red and blue, respectively.

“So far as of 10 a.m. Trump is in the lead 3 to 1,” she told Fox News on Friday morning.

The original cookie poll, in Red Wing, Minnesota, concurs:

Opinions be what they may, but the only acceptable answer here comes piled high with red, white, and blue frosting, and can be found in Red Wing. Each costs $4, and will be counted as a vote for president. Sort of.

Every four years, Hanisch Bakery and Coffee Shop celebrates democracy in the sweetest way possible: by hosting the Presidential Cookie Poll. “It’s a fun election poll that just happens to be pretty darn accurate for some reason,” says Bill Hanisch, the establishment’s chief manager and owner.

In the 1920s, the bakery was called Quandt’s. It’s undergone several ownership and name changes since then, but Hanisch is sure the Braschler family conceived of the cookie poll we recognize today during the Mondale-Reagan election because he worked under them starting when he was 15 years old. Though he’s not certain why the poll first ran back in 1984, the current owner bets it was a simple move to drum up business.

When Hanisch bought the bakery in 2007, he understood he would also become ringmaster for a unique political circus that’s getting more unwieldy each election cycle. So far this year, Trump’s cookies have outsold Biden’s by a mile. 

The cookies have spoken. Trumpslide 2020. 


Division and Qanon

It seems to me that the mainstream media usually celebrates things that tend to tear families apart, things like divorce and immigration and transgenderism and interracial relationships. I wonder why tearing families apart has suddenly become a bad thing in its eyes?

QAnon can be traced back to a series of 2017 posts on 4chan, the online message board known for its mixture of trolls and alt-right followers. The poster was someone named “Q,” who claimed to be a government insider with Q security clearance, the highest level in the Department of Energy. QAnon’s origin matters less than what it’s become, an umbrella term for a loose set of conspiracy theories ranging from the false claim that vaccines cause illness and are a method of controlling the masses to the bogus assertion that many pop stars and Democratic leaders are pedophiles.

The choose-your-own-adventure nature of QAnon makes it compelling to vulnerable people desperate for a sense of security and difficult for Twitter and Facebook to control, despite their efforts. It’s becoming increasingly mainstreamed as several QAnon-friendly candidates won congressional primaries. And the FBI has warned that it could “very likely motivate some domestic extremists to commit criminal, sometimes violent activity.”

As QAnon has crept into the news, it’s become a testament to our age of political disinformation, not to mention easy online comedic currency. But what’s often forgotten in stories and jokes are the people behind the scenes who are baffled at a loved one’s embrace of the “movement,” and who struggle to keep it from tearing their families apart.

Then again, I seem to recall that someone else once came to tear families apart. Perhaps division is not such a bad thing…

Do you think I came to bring peace on earth? No, I tell you, but division. From now on there will be five in one family divided against each other, three against two and two against three. They will be divided, father against son and son against father, mother against daughter and daughter against mother, mother-in-law against daughter-in-law and daughter-in-law against mother-in-law.

– Luke 12:51-53


An important lesson in multiculturalism

I tend to doubt it was the lesson for the day that the teacher had in mind, but it will indubitably prove an indelible one.

A parent shouting Allahu Akbar and thought to be wearing an explosive vest has been shot dead by French police near Paris after allegedly beheading a school teacher with a knife.

The victim was said to have been a school teacher who had enraged parents by displaying cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed to pupils.

A source told Le Parisien: ‘The victim had recently given a lesson to his students on freedom of expression and had shown the caricatures of Muhammad’.

This led to an enraged parent confronting the teacher with a kitchen knife, and then cutting his head off, said the source.

The real tragedy, of course, would be if the students were to develop an unfortunate antipathy for Muslims as a result of their cultural enrichment. 

UPDATE: Of course, the feckless French surrender monkey who purports to “lead” the country is still pushing idiotic civnattery.

‘He said the attack should not divide France because that is what the extremists want. We must stand all together as citizens.’    

Civnattery is a fraud. Nationalism, genuine nationalism, is the only cure for the multicultural disease.


Four game designers, two interviews

My recruitment efforts for high-quality additions to the DevGame site have already been rewarded beyond my reasonable expectations, as two veteran game developers have already agreed to become regular contributors. Restitutor Orbis, a game designer who is the newest contributor to DevGame, interviewed Chris Crawford, legendary game designer and founder of the Game Developers Conference, in 2005:

Eastern Front (1941) was one of Crawford’s most noteworthy creations so I decided to press him for details. “Eastern Front was a creative implementation of an obvious idea. ‘Let’s do a good wargame on a computer!’” he said. “Pulling it off involved an awful lot of creativity, but it required tactical creativity as opposed to strategic creativity.”

I was puzzled by what he meant. Crawford has a reputation for being outspoken, but it’s a cryptic sort of outspokenness, profound to the point of incomprehensibility. Talking to him can be like reading A Brief History of Time at 120 words a minute. You always feel like you’re missing something.

“Tactical creativity is implementation creativity. How do we build a good map? How do we move units around? How do we build a good AI system? You already know where you are going and you are just figuring out how to get there.”

“So would you say in today’s game industry we have a lot of tactical creativity and less strategic creativity?” I asked.

“Nowadays the stuff we call creative is tiny, tiny stuff. It’s hard to even call it creative at all. Technically, yes, I see a lot of creativity. But I see almost no design creativity in the stuff that’s coming out there.”

What was beginning to become apparent in 2005 is now completely obvious to everyone 15 years later. Read the whole thing. For my part, I interviewed Brad Wardell,  designer of Galactic Civilizations and publisher of Sins of a Solar Empire and Sorceror King, as part of the 2016 DevGame course:

VD: You’ve moved from doing science fiction with Galactic Civilizations into doing 4X fantasy with Fallen Enchantress and Sorcerer King. What were some of the challenges that were involved in moving from science fiction to fantasy?

Brad: The biggest one for us was going from a space-based game like Galactic Civilizations II to a land-based game like Fallen Enchantress. Specifically, the terrain. You are dealing with the ground. And that turned out to be a huge challenge for us because we had never had to deal with it before. We had never really run up against things like video memory or the limitations of DirectX in terms of how to make a mountain. You think about it, of course, but how you make something like a mountain can be limiting based on DirectX, because there’s only so many points you can put on there. So that turned out to be a huge hurdle for us, and that really bit us in the butt, because, at the time, we didn’t do our homework on what we could and couldn’t do with the current technology.

VD: Interesting. That’s very timely because we’re going to be getting into things like polygon count and so forth when we talk about art later today. Now, in the publishing world, the market for fantasy is considerably larger than the one for science fiction. Is that true in games as well, or do you find that science fiction usually outsells fantasy?

Brad: I read mostly science fiction myself. In the game arena, I would say science fiction tends to be a bit ahead of fantasy, only because the problem people run into with fantasy is that they think fantasy means medieval Europe with magic. And that’s not a just a problem in terms of the designer’s limits, it’s more the expectations of the public. If you move too far outside the box, you are punished for it in the marketplace. Whereas in science fiction, you have a little bit more room to breathe.

Even if you’re not a game developer, or a wannabe game developer, there is a good chance you’re going to learn a lot of interesting information from these interviews. And if you’re a gamer, you’re definitely going to want to add DevGame to your daily bookmarks list. 


“This should trouble you immensely”

Clay Travis calls out the troubling behavior of the Big Tech media cabal:

Democrats impeached the president for his call with Ukraine’s president asking for Ukraine to look into this issue. Now that the Hunter Biden emails have surfaced, it appears the president was 100{5c1a0fb425e4d1363f644252322efd648e1c42835b2836cd8f67071ddd0ad0e3} correct. Did Joe Biden have a secret meeting with Ukraine officials, cover it up, and then lie about it?

That’s certainly what Hunter Biden’s email would suggest.

Now, again, you may not care. Or may not think a story like this should impact your presidential vote. But for a technology company to unilaterally and arbitrarily suspend all discussion of this issue?

That should be terrifying to anyone. Whether you’re a Democrat, Republican or an independent, this should trouble you immensely.

There absolutely, positively have to be content neutral rules in place for major tech companies, which are acting as default monopolies when it comes to online news distribution in our country. If those tech companies decide to favor one political party’s side over the other, that’s not proper behavior and we need major investigations to uncover how and why this is occurring.

Not allowing a story like this to circulate artificially constrains the marketplace of ideas and keeps the American public from being exposed to all arguments and perspectives about an important election decision. When editors at Twitter and Facebook are artificially manipulating which stories you see — and favoring one political party in the process — it’s also no longer possible for the tech platforms to claim they are not exercising editorial decision making.

Get rid of Section 230. End the platform/publisher dance. This isn’t that hard. 


The gloves come off in Europe

In case you doubted the inevitable rise of nationalism, the fact that the EU states are resorting to legal charades and Soviet-style show trials to keep the nationalist opposition out of electoral office should suffice to prove otherwise.

Multiple European Union states are breaking with post-war liberal conventions and openly imprisoning prominent political opponents and intellectuals for ideological crimes.

The tactic being used by these governments is “rule through law,” as opposed to rule of law. The strategy is commonly deployed in nations like Saudi Arabia against journalists, intellectuals and opposition figures who are targeted for repression first, then selectively prosecuted using often vaguely defined existing laws after.

Greece

Earlier today a judge in Athens condemned almost all of Golden Dawn’s elected officials, including sitting European parliament member Ioannis Lagos, to years in prison. Nikos Michaloliakos, Golden Dawn’s General Secretary, was given 13 years for a RICO-style charge that alleged his patriotic Greek party, which until recently was the third most popular in the country, is a criminal organization.

Michaloliakos was not tied to any specific crime, but prosecutors used editions of his group’s magazine featuring articles about Germany during World War II from the 1980s and 90s to argue that their political ideas were a form of violence in and of themselves.

In a public statement published to the Golden Dawn website Michaloliakos blamed the court’s ruling on Golden Dawn’s sudden electoral rise in 2013, stating “They say we are a criminal Nazi organization. [If that’s true] why did they wait 30 years to charge us?”

He accurately pointed out that Golden Dawn was never accused of being a criminal organization since its founding in the 1980s. It was only after May 2012, when the party achieved 7{5c1a0fb425e4d1363f644252322efd648e1c42835b2836cd8f67071ddd0ad0e3} of the vote, that the Greek state decided it was time to arrest them in 2013.

All that the neoliberals will accomplish is to reveal their own fascism and democratic illegitimacy. These are acts of desperation and fear, they are indications that the neoliberals know the end of their era is rapidly approaching.


The global shutdown

It’s becoming more and more obvious that in the eyes of the terrified global pedocracy, Qanon is the real pandemic:

Europe’s domestic intelligence and law-enforcement services have apprehensively watched the QAnon conspiracy theory migrate from the US and now consider it a significant security concern.

That assessment was given by two security officials contacted by Insider, both of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity given the nature of their work.

QAnon advocates claim that the US is secretly controlled by a cabal of politicians, celebrities, and media figures who engage in child abuse and pedophilia and that President Donald Trump will eventually move against these people. Its believers seek clues from an unknown government insider known as Q. There is no evidence to support the theory, and none of its foretold reckonings have taken place.

Now what could they possibly be apprehensive about? As for the statement that none of its foretold reckonings have taken place…. 

UPDATE: /pol/ says more Hunter Biden video will be released soon.

Over 30 people in the media have a copy of the hard dive and other info. We’ll all be releasing everything at the same strategic time. Its gonna be like a nuclear bomb on the DNC. I might exclusively leak some stuff here shortly before we drop the bomb. I will tell you that The Bidens make Weiner look like a fucking saint and expose Joe as possibility the most crooked VP in American history.


Why the media is terrified

It seems more than a little strange that the entire media, mainstream and social, is suddenly at Defcon 1 over Hunter Biden. Neon Revolt thinks he knows why:

These two things – they’re connected.

THIS is the thread they’re terrified of coming out. The connection no one has made yet.

We already know the name of a Child Sex Crimes investigator at the FBI was looking into Hunter.

We got Chanel Rion’s post today on twitter about an “underage obsession.”

We know the laptop repair guy went to BOTH the media and the FBI because of what he found on Hunter’s laptop.

Hunter raped a kid.

But no one is asking the obvious question, yet:

WHERE DID THE KID COME FROM??

And just like that, the Q post about Red October and Hunters becoming the hunted begins to make complete sense. 


“Nobody believes you guys”

The media is gradually beginning to grasp that their relentless demoralization campaign has failed completely:

President Donald Trump trails Joe Biden by 10 points in national polls. He’s getting badly outspent due to a depleted warchest. And his contraction of the coronavirus has yet again turned a harsh light on his handling of a seven-month pandemic.

A good number of rank-and-file Republican voters and local party officials see no cause for concern. They’re still convinced Trump is winning.

Far outside the political media centers of Washington, D.C. and New York, the Trump voters who propelled the reality TV star to a shock victory in 2016 once again see him on a glide path to victory that will stupefy only a hostile media and out-of-touch elites.

The frenzied crowds he’s attracting as he returns to the trail and the Trump banners flying in their neighborhoods measure enthusiasm that can’t be accurately tracked by surveys, they argue. The cascade of negative stories from his downplaying of the pandemic to his private insults of military service members are shrugged off or disbelieved.

And remember how wrong many of the state-based polls were last time? They certainly do.

We’ll find out soon enough. What will happen will happen. But as the ex-governor said, no one believes the Fake Polls put forth by the Fake News. No one should. Because it is transparently false.


MEDIA WHORES: Brave Sir William

MEDIA WHORES: COURTESANS AND CHARLATANS OF THE AMERICAN COMMENTARIAT

CHAPTER THREE: Brave Sir William

“Say hello to my little friend.”

Even with the sound turned off, the baddest man on television is Bill O’Reilly.  From his bullying persona to his ever-jabbing pencil, he projects an aura of working class pugnacity.  Indeed, were it not for the studio lights, O’Reilly might well consider filming his show in a gorilla costume, for only in the depths of the Congo can one hope to see more enthusiastic chest-beating.  And he is not entirely unjustified in doing so, for he has toppled the long-reigning ruler of cable television news.  Larry King is dead(1), long live the king!

And Bill O’Reilly is more than a TV talking head, he is a dominant force in the broader media.  In addition to his top rated show, The O’Reilly Factor, he pens a column, hosts a radio show and has even, in the tradition of William F. Buckley and Newt Gingrich, written a thriller, Those Who Trespass.  While Al Franken cheaply, (though justifiably) mocks The Factor’s foolhardy venture into prose(2), Mr. O’Reilly is actually to be commended for daring to branch out artistically.  The fact that Hermann Hesse was a lousy painter doesn’t cheapen the value of his novels, after all, nor should one’s opinion of O’Reilly the novelist affect our view of O’Reilly, the king of conservative media.  Nor am I inclined to turn loose the Fourteen Investigators on a wild hunt dedicated to uncovering petty dichotomies such as the Mysterious Case of the Missing Peabody.

What should affect our view of him instead is the fact that the emperor wears no clothes.  For all his insistence that he is merely a populist representing traditional values, O’Reilly is popular primarily because he is considered a defender of the conservative faith.  When he first entered into the public’s consciousness with the Fox News Channel, the mere fact that he would have Republicans on his show without strapping them to their chairs and subjecting them to a penetrating inquisition worthy of the Star Chamber – metaphorically speaking – instantly won him the allegiance of conservatives across the nation.  Add to this the fact that he was willing to go after left-wing lunatics and celebrity shysters, and did not cower in fear from the ABCNNBCBS cabal but instead reveled in his maverick status; considering how starved the conservative masses were for a media hero, it is little wonder that he has found a large following.

And yet, Bill O’Reilly has stated on many occasions that he is not a conservative or a Republican, but is entirely independent.  This is technically true(3), but in any case, the vast majority of the viewing public, including his detractors on the left and his supporters on the right, still considers him to be a powerful conservative voice.  And indeed, he is far more supportive of President Bush than he was of President Clinton or of the leading Democratic presidential candidates, including Howard Dean and John Kerry.

But to conclude that because O’Reilly tends to support President Bush and the Republicans and take them at their word(4), he is therefore a conservative is to make a basic error in logic.  This makes the faulty assumption that President Bush is a conservative, a position with which many conservative Republicans would take great issue.  Rather than relying on politicians, a more reliable source is to consider the ideological views of the subject under scrutiny.  Consider, for example, the very small divergence between Bill O’Reilly’s views and the conservative position on the following subjects:

TOPIC     O’Reilly Conservatives

Gay Rights YES NO

Gun Control YES NO

Abortion YES NO

Global Warming YES NO

Campaign Finance Reform YES NO

Indeed, the only political positions that are generally perceived as overtly conservative that O’Reilly currently advocates are tax cuts, support for the Iraqi War and the War on Terror, support for the War on Drugs, and immigration restrictions.  But what is conservative about a Wilsonian war, an undeclared and open-ended war-on-method, and the greatest expansion of federal power since LBJ’s Great Society?(5)

Even Michael Moore, the Great White Whale of American liberalism, recognizes Bill O’Reilly, if not quite as an ideological friend, as no enemy either.  In his best-selling book, Dude, Where’s My Country, he defended O’Reilly against unfounded charges of conservative Republicanism, stating his belief that O’Reilly was “indeed an independent”.  But there are others who see O’Reilly’s independent moderation as something else entirely.  Ann Coulter, whose conservative bona fides are impeccable, is openly unimpressed with O’Reilly’s perfectly balanced nuance.  In a column inspired by the media’s coverage of the Swift Boat veterans, she wrote:

“There is the Bill O’Reilly method, which is to abandon independent thinking and simply come out in the middle, irrespective of where the two sides are. In response to Newt Gingrich’s remark that the Swift Boat Veterans’ independent ads were “the conservative movement’s answer to Michael Moore,” O’Reilly said, “I don’t want either of them.”  In Nazi Germany, O’Reilly would have condemned both Hitler’s death camps and the Warsaw ghetto uprising. In Bill O’Reilly’s world, King Solomon would have actually cut the disputed baby in half.   The O’Reilly method of analysis works well about once a century. The last time was when Hitler invaded Russia in 1941.”

O’Reilly observers will note that the man has always had an unusual – I dare say unique – approach to ideology.  With regards to Miss Coulter herself, he once announced that she was not “far-right” because she was “friends with Bill Maher”.  I am familiar with a veritable cornucopia of methods for defining the political spectrum, but O’Reilly’s is the first to be predicated on amicable relationships.  Indeed, one has good cause to imagine that O’Reilly intends to not only redefine the political spectrum, but the very fabric of the space-time continuum itself!  Consider the following transcript of The O’Reilly Factor, when Bill Press, the host of CNN’s Crossfire, entered the no-spin zone after the release of his book, Spin This.

BILL O’REILLY, HOST: With us now from Washington is Bill Press, one of the hosts of the CNN program Crossfire. Mr. Press has written a new book called Spin This. In that book, he is none too friendly to your humble correspondent, me….  Wow, I guess we’re really terrible, huh, Bill? 

BILL PRESS, CO-HOST, CROSSFIRE: Good evening, Bill O’Reilly. How are you? 

O’REILLY: I’m all right. 

PRESS: I wouldn’t say you’re so terrible. My point is simply that I think you should be honest and admit that we all spin. And you spin as much as I do or Bob Novak does or any of the other… 

O’REILLY: I want you to give me one, since you’re concentrated in your book on The Factor, somewhat, give me one example of how I’ve spun a new story, one? 

PRESS: Well, first of all, I do have to say in all honesty that my pages about you, I think, maybe there are three pages in a 220-page book.

Since I’m devoting this entire chapter to Bill O’Reilly’s favorite subject, Bill O’Reilly, I rather expect he’ll consider this book to be an unauthorized hagiography and file for a restraining order on the grounds that I’m stalking him.

Television is an inherently deceptive medium. It is much harder to deceive in text, where the reader has the opportunity to easily review something that might have been passed over in a casual first read. After reading Mr. Reilly’s first book, it was readily apparent that it was not the product of a logical, intellectual or conservative mind, but rather a haphazard collection of muddled opinions which reflected a strong government moderate’s typically hazy grasp of political reality. 

For example, Mr. O’Reilly once attacked the president of the Gun Owners of America and labled him a a nutcase on the political fringe due to the GOA’s opposition to the assault weapons ban. This immediately demonstrated three things: 

  1. The Factor does not understand the purpose of the Second Amendment, which is to ensure that the people are able to militarily resist their government.  One would think that a man educated in Boston would know that the battles of Lexington and Concord were fought by Americans resisting the attempt of their lawful and legitimate government to confiscate private weapon stores. 
  2. The Factor does not understand the Assault Weapons Ban, which does not concern itself with bazookas and machine guns, but pistol grips and magazine clips.  In fact, the very next night, the Factor made a laughable claim that his statement was born of hyperbole, not ignorance, presumably due to one of his interns filling him in on things after googling the matter.
  3. The Factor has no intention of allowing open debate on his program. It’s his program, so he can do whatever he wishes, but it rather puts the lie to his “No-Spin” claim. Mr. O’Reilly is every bit the agitprop artist that Michael Moore is, which, no doubt, partially accounts for the success they have both enjoyed.

From this evidence, the inexperienced observer might conclude at this point that he has spotted an exemplary specimen of Scortus medius adlatus.  After all, the four primary identifying characteristics are all manifestly present.

  •  Egomania
  •  A severe case of rutilus lux addiction
  •  Reliably principle-free
  •  Dependably undependable

But just as one would be mistaken to think that Bill O’Reilly is a conservative, one would also be wrong to view him as nothing more than an unbiased, self-centered media parasite interested in nothing but feeding off the political bloodstream.  Lately, The Factor has gloried in proclaiming that various individuals are “ducking” and “backing down” from him. This is rather ironic in the face of the following transcript from Fox News dated August 24, 2004: 

The ACLU held its annual convention, but The Factor was not invited. However, The Factor said, “Colorado Gov. Bill Owens, a Republican, was, and he debated our pal Howard Dean, who remains too frightened to appear on [this show]. The debate dealt with the Patriot Act. Dean claimed it robs us of individual rights.” The Factor reminded, “If anybody has been abused by the Patriot Act, call us, please. We want to put them on the air.” 

Upon hearing this challenge by Bill O’Reilly, Michael Badnarik, the Libertarian Party’s candidate for president, was quick to respond to Mr. O’Reilly’s challenge, apprising “The Factor” personnel of his victimized status.  When danger – in the form of a political candidate, who, unlike Bill’s pal, is not primary roadkill, but was on the ballot in all 50 states in the 2004 election – reared its ugly head, Bill O’Reilly bravely turned his tail and fled. One of The Factor’s minions sent the following e-mail: 

According to producers, the “challenge” has apparently been misunderstood in terms of what Bill actually said on the air. There is no interest in having Mr. Badnarik on the show at this time. 

A misunderstanding!  Did The Factor mean to say that he does not want to put someone abused by the Patriot Act on the air? Did he dispute or refute Badnarik’s claim to victim status?  No, actually, to both counts.  Now, it would be quite conceivable that this was nothing more than simple distaste for questionable grandstanding by a fringe political figure, except for the fact that O’Reilly had previously “postponed” the Libertarian candidate’s scheduled appearance on the show a month before so late that Badnarik was being driven on his way to the studio when he received the call.

But the third time, as they say, is the charm, and the real reason for O’Reilly’s turnabout was revealed by a similar disinvitation in August, when a Muslim-American by the name of Dr. I. Dean Ahmad was invited to take what was described as “the anti-Bush stance” against a Muslim-American supporter of President Bush. 

As Dr. Ahmad recounts it: “The show is off! O’Reilly has pulled an O’Reilly.  I was actually in the car being driven to the show when his deputy called me and informed me that although they would identify me as a Muslim supporter of [Michael] Badnarik, that I was not allowed to mention Michael’s name on the show! I declined to accept those terms and they had the driver bring me back.”

A replacement for Dr. Ahmad was found at the very last minute, Khalid Turaani, the founder of Arab-American Republicans Against Bush, but it seems that despite The Factor’s best laid plans, things went agley.

“I just got off the phone with Khalid Turaani. Here’s what happened: They called him 30 minutes before taping and asked him if he would take the anti-Bush position on the show. He agreed and they rushed him down to the studio. They kept pressing him as to whom he would vote for and he kept dodging the question, saying he would say that on the show. Kerry? No, he said, I’m a conservative, I would never vote for Kerry. At the studio they pressed real hard and he admitted that he planned to vote for Badnarik. When he say the panic in their eyes he realized that despite their “fair and balanced” claims, they were Bush supporters. They tried to dissuade him from mentioning it on air, but by then it was too late to do to him what they did to me. He went on the air and said that a vote against Bush need not be a vote for Kerry and that he would vote for Badnarik, the Libertarian.” (6)

Mr Turaani’s actual statement that broke the ban on the Forbidden Words of Doom was: “I don’t want to cut off my nose to spite my face by not liking Bush and jumping in the lap of Kerry. No – I will vote Libertarian and I think Badnarik is going to be a good choice for people who don’t like Bush.”

But why does Brave Sir William fear the squamous terror of the B-word, the ghastly horror of the L-word (7)?  How can a complete unknown, sworn to a principle of no-first use of force, inspire such uncharacteristic pusillanimity in the pugnacious one?  Blogosphere rumor had it that subsequent to a visit to the Fox News Channel by Vice-President Cheney, it was understood that any mention of any candidate who might threaten the Vice-President’s continued employment by mentioning parties of potential appeal to otherwise Republican voters was not to be tolerated.  No spin there, just a quiet understanding of what would be considered outside the bounds of fair-and-balanced, independent media commentary.

So, for all that he is not a conservative, these election-year shenanigans demonstrate that Bill O’Reilly does have an interest in something bigger than his own oversized ego.  He is what some mistakenly call a RINO, Republican-In-Name-Only, but what Fred Barnes has more accurately characterized as a Big Government Conservative, which is to say, not a conservative at all. (8)  Not only does the emperor have no clothes, but he is flat on his back as well.  The king is a courtesan.

Both Adlatus and Washingtonia, Bill O’Reilly is truly a breed unto himself.  He is an inspiration, in fact, for like Bill O’Reilly, I too harbor aspirations toward Renaissance manhood.  In fact, I found that these repeated incidents of the pugnacious one’s unexpected cowardice actually inspired me to song.  And so with apologies to the greatest movie of all time, I present to you, gentle reader, a lyric dedicated to the fearless defender of the working man.

The Ballad of Brave Sir William (9)

Bravely bold Sir William strode forth from FNC.

He did not fear to debate, O brave Sir William!

He was not at all afraid to be humbled in nasty ways,

Brave, brave, brave, brave O’Reilly!

He was not in the least bit scared to be mashed into a pulp,

Or to have his lies exposed and his logic broken;

His infinitives all split, his opinions blown away;

And his facts all hacked and mangled, brave Sir William!

His case smashed in and its heart cut out

And his proofs disproved, his polemic unplugged

And his talking points raped, and his claims disembowled

And [radio edit](10)

Brave Sir William ran away.

He bravely ran away, away!

When danger reared its ugly head, 

He bravely turned his tail and fled.

Yes, brave Sir William turned about

And gallantly he chickened out.

Bravely taking to his feet

He beat a very brave retreat,

Bravest of the brave, O’Reilly!

FOOTNOTES

(1) I have it on good authority that Larry King is not actually dead, he only looks like he’s an embalmed drag queen sans wig.

(2) Speaking as a writer who has published four novels and twice served on SFWA Nebula Award juries, let’s just say that America’s great triumvirate of literary lions, Tom Clancy, Stephen King and Michael Crichton, have little to fear and leave it at that.

(3) He was a registered Republican from 1994 through 2000.

(4) During his appearance on Good Morning America on May 18, 2004, O’Reilly assured the nation “I am much more skeptical of the Bush administration now than I was at that time.”  It would seem that the Masters of Broadcast Journalism program at Boston University doesn’t subscribe to the Society of Professional Journalist’s guidelines.

(5) I’ve never quite grasped the notion that the Democratic Party is anti-war.  Pop quiz: The President belonged to which party when America entered World War I, World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War.  Hint: the answer isn’t Republican.

(6) Dr. I. Dean Ahmad, email to Stephen Gordon, Communications Director of Badnarik/Campagna 2004 Headquarters.

(7) The Libertarian Party, not the sapphic show.

(8) Friedrich von Hayek, in his excellent essay on Social Justice, pointed out what should be immediately obvious to anyone with a basic knowledge of grammar.  If the concept requires modifying a noun with an adjective, the modified result necessarily diverges from the original concept.

(9) To be sung to the tune of Monte Python’s “The Ballad of Brave Sir Robin.”  And if you didn’t know that, why are you reading this book?  Now, go away or I shall taunt you a second time.

(10) For those of you who actually know the song, if I were Candide and this world were perfect, lacking evils such as war, poverty, crime, hate, violence and editors, there would have been a reference to the likelihood that something was very small indeed.